Greetings,
A reminder of tonights open house.
Also a second installment from Alice Feiring.
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 10:02:52 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: fwd: Kalsen Studio Open House and art a whirl
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Greetings Winers, (no whiners!),
This was most excellent last time.
Please bring something to share, nothing too precious...
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from Jason Kallsen <jkallsen(a)cpinternet.com> -----
From: Jason Kallsen <jkallsen(a)cpinternet.com>
To: "'Jim L. Ellingson'" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
Subject: Kallsen Studio open house for Art-A-Whirl
Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 08:09:09 -0500
Jim -
One week from today, Friday May 16th, everybody is invited to the studio for
a wine party of massive proportions. 5-10pm, come when you can stay as long
as you want.
That is the opening weekend for Art-A-Whirl, so it's going to be very busy
around that neighborhood.
Hope to see you and the group there (please forward info).
Kallsen Studio
Thorp Building
1618 Central Avenue Northeast Suite 6
Minneapolis, MN 55413
612.789.9910
www.kallsenstudio.com <http://www.kallsenstudio.com/>
Jason Kallsen
cell 952.212.3965
voice mail 952.941.8795 x 301
"We are not creatures of circumstance,
we are creators of circumstance."
-Benjamin Disraeli
----- End forwarded message -----
Viewing wine through a Parkerized looking glass
Alice Feiring, Special to The Chronicle
Friday, May 16, 2008
Steve Edmunds, owner of Edmunds St. John Winery in Berkel... Despite criticism of his
wines, says Steve Edmunds, "Plen... Wine critic Robert M. Parker Jr., a longtime
supporter of...
Saddled with the name Alice, I've long-suffered from the inevitable Wonderland
reference. However, when it comes to the critical acclaim for New World-style winemaking,
I really do wonder if I've stepped through the looking glass.
I shun popular fruit-driven wines just as I do cardboard tomatoes. Others rush to them the
way mice rush to sugar. Are we really tasting the same wines? Is my palate so peculiar? Or
have others had their taste buds brainwashed?
It occurs to me that larger forces might be at play, pushing these bold flavors,
especially when a respected winemaker gets publicly paddled for making wine in a
restrained style. And especially when it's a vintner whose wines were previously
lauded, like Steve Edmunds of Berkeley's Edmunds St. John winery.
I first experienced Edmunds' wine in the form of his Port O'Call New World Red.
This was back at a 1989 wedding in the Berkeley hills, and it was everything I used to
like about what California could produce. The grapes in the wine were identifiable as a
Rhone-style blend with the taste of those lovely soft, barely cooked mi-cuit prunes from
Provence, and didn't skimp on tannic structure, but it also had that California
brightness.
Uber critic Robert M. Parker Jr. liked it as well. In his early criticism, he heaped on
praise, calling Edmunds St. John perhaps the "finest practitioner" of
Californians working with Rhone grapes. He remained an Edmunds supporter for nearly two
decades, even stating in a 1994 write-up, "I love this guy's wines." But
something started to turn. Parker's current notes might say more about where the
critic is now, than Edmunds.
A couple of years back I traveled from New York to Paso Robles, on assignment researching
the region's wines and attending Hospice du Rhone, an annual celebration of Rhone
grapes. I'm a redhead who melts in the heat, and the sauna-like conditions on the day
of the gala tasting - reminiscent of the real Rhone Valley - made me weak. I gulped some
ice water and revived the old curmudgeon within as I grumbled, "OK, there must be
something I can tolerate in this room."
A few wineries impressed me - Pipestone, Adelaida and Tablas Creek. But California
generally is out of my usual taste preference. Still, I was there to experience the
scenery, so I sidestepped the exhibiting French vignerons and made rounds of the locals.
Right next to where the hefty wines of Turley Wine Cellars were being poured was their
polar opposite: Edmunds St. John. With graying blond hair and vintage pre-'90s
spectacles, Steve Edmunds, a boyish 58, had a
get-me-out-of-here-and-put-a-guitar-in-my-hand kind of demeanor.
I took a sip of his Los Robles Red Viejos Rozet Vineyards Paso Robles from the 2000
vintage. I liked it and was so relieved to find Edmunds' mark of restraint still
stamped on the wine. The 2001 Basseti Vineyard Syrah was next, all sunny and tasting of
olive, with well-knit tannin. Good and healthy tannin. "There's hope," I
thought.
But not everyone shares my love of tannin, like the guy tasting next to me. He asked
Edmunds: "Is this ever going to open up?"
Like Edmunds' way of dressing, or his eyeglasses, little has changed in his
winemaking. He still doesn't have his own winery. He buys his fruit from trusted
sources. He approaches the wines as he has for more than 20 years. The dirt the grapes
grew in did not change; neither did Edmunds' approach to the grapes. He still
interprets the parcels he uses, with vintage and maturity being the only variables. He
picks earlier than most and has never bowed to the gods of new oak. His aim is to work
with the power of California fruit and not, as is popular today, augment it. The wine was
plenty open for me. I directed Mr. Closed Wine to Turley.
Parker on the attack
Though Edmunds enjoyed Parker's praise, his scores never made it to the cult status
of 95 points or higher. Since his first vintage in 1987, Edmunds' restrained style
has made him an unsung hero for those who believe California should lower the sugar and
lift the personality in its wines. But in Parker's eyes, Edmunds seemingly started to
falter in 2004 and cracked in the 2005 vintage, when Parker slammed him with damning
scores ranging from 84 to 87. Where in years past, even middling scores for Edmunds were
accompanied by glowing prose, this time the words stung.
In the August 2007 Wine Advocate Parker wrote, "What Steve is doing appears to be a
deliberate attempt to make French-styled wines. Of course California is not France and
therein may suggest the problem. If you want to make French wine, do it in France."
"Wow," I thought, "wine critic on the attack." Criticizing a wine for
trying to be French? As Edmunds has said, he does not want to augment the power that is
natural to California. Was he punished for elegance or has America and its most favored
critic forgotten the beauty of restraint? The personal attack seemed out of line, more
like a spurned lover. There were also some choice words that would quickly lay me flat on
a shrink's couch if they were used about a piece of my writing: "innocuous
effort," "one-dimensional," "superfluous."
Was Parker was playing the Wonderland Duchess, screaming, "Off with his head"?
Parker's style has been quick to laud and hesitant to criticize. This show of
displeasure was highly out of character. The words indicated offense, but what could be
offensive? Did Edmunds disappoint by not succumbing to a preference for jam and oak? Was
this to be a cautionary tale to those who take a stand against non-Parkerized wines?
I wanted to inquire what Edmunds' thought of it all. Before we met up for dinner this
March, I retasted some 2005s. I found the 2005 Parmelee Hills compelling, with touches of
mint, the deep smoked blueberry of Syrah and a definite touch of granite in the rain. The
wine had opened more than the last time I had it and was far from superfluous or
innocuous.
In fact, over the next few days it opened up and showed even more complexity. The Red Neck
101 Eaglepoint Ranch, which Parker said had a "superficial personality," sang
with cocoa, forest and plum. Both of these wines were quite closed when I last tasted them
five months previous. Edmunds' wines need some time. Sometimes a few months. Parker
is an experienced taster, shouldn't he have known this? (I would have contacted
Parker, but I suspected he wouldn't take the call.)
I kicked off the Edmunds evening with a brilliant skid on the slick floor of New
York's Gramercy Tavern restaurant that landed me right on my butt. As I nursed my
wounds over a bottle of Beaujolais, Edmunds told me he, too, was mystified by the Parker
debacle. It occurred to him that somehow he offended the critic. Perhaps it was a
discussion of Syrah on Parker's Web site. "I said that I hoped that Syrah
didn't get turned into an SUV, and Parker popped in on the thread and called me a
wimp."
Vintner sticks to his guns
But there is evidence of discontent in the wings. Despite Edmunds' spanking, I'm
hopeful that others might have the spunk to lower the dial on the fruit and expose the
complexity California wine can have.
"Plenty of people offered me encouragement," Edmunds said, "for being
willing to take such a beating for not making the style of wine that Parker seems to
demand."
What helped ease the pain was that far from worrying about hurting his sales,
Edmunds' East Coast sales rep sent out a mailing that said: "Edmunds St. John
scores mediocre points in the Wine Advocate!"
And the wine sold like hotcakes.
Maybe I'm not in Wonderland after all.
Alice Feiring is a wine journalist, blogger and author of the newly released book
"The Battle for Wine and Love - Or How I Saved the World from Parkerization."
E-mail her at wine(a)sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/16/WIUU10KEOG.DTL
This article appeared on page F - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *